# Scientific Understanding of Animal Consciousness and Sentience

## Theoretical and Physiological Foundations of Consciousness

The scientific investigation of animal consciousness requires distinguishing between reflexive biological functions and subjective internal experiences. Historically, comparative psychology and neurobiology struggled to define sentience due to the inherent inaccessibility of an organism's private mental state. However, modern ethological frameworks and neuroscientific mapping have provided robust methodologies for identifying the physiological and behavioral markers of consciousness. This inquiry demands precise definitions separating basic sensory encoding from complex emotional and cognitive processing.

### The Dichotomy of Nociception and Subjective Pain

A foundational element in evaluating animal sentience is the critical distinction between nociception and pain. The International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) defines nociception as the neural process of encoding noxious stimuli [cite: 1, 2]. This process relies on specialized sensory neurons, such as unmyelinated C fibers or thinly myelinated Aδ nerve fibers, which detect potentially damaging environmental stimuli [cite: 1]. When activated, these fibers transmit signals through central branches to the spinal cord's dorsal horn neurons, frequently relaying them to motor neurons to trigger a rapid withdrawal reflex, or to preganglionic sympathetic neurons in the intermediolateral nucleus to induce autonomic responses like elevated blood pressure [cite: 1]. Crucially, nociception operates primarily at the level of the spinal cord or peripheral nervous system and does not necessarily engage higher-order brain regions to produce conscious awareness [cite: 1, 2]. 

Pain, conversely, was redefined by the IASP in 2020 as an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage [cite: 1]. This definition explicitly decoupled pain from verbal communication, asserting that an organism's inability to verbally articulate distress does not negate the possibility of subjective suffering [cite: 1]. 

The scientific and clinical communities debate the exact relationship between nociception and pain. While nociception typically triggers pain, researchers note that pain can occur independently of nociceptive input, such as in cases of central neuropathic pain following a stroke [cite: 1, 3]. Conversely, autonomic nociceptive responses can occur under general anesthesia without the subject experiencing conscious pain [cite: 1]. Contemporary pain researchers, including Weisman, Quintner, and Cohen, argue that nociception is a necessary but not sufficient precondition for pain in typical physiological contexts, contesting the concept of "pain without nociception" as speculative [cite: 4, 5]. However, clinical observations indicate that nociceptive firing thresholds can be altered by inflammation and neuropathic conditions, demonstrating that the translation of nociceptive signals into conscious pain is a highly modulated, multi-factorial experience orchestrated by complex brain activity [cite: 3].

### Distinguishing Observable Emotions From Subjective Feelings

To bridge the gap between measurable behavior and unobservable mental states, primatologists and ethologists have established frameworks separating emotions from feelings. Frans de Waal, drawing on extensive research with chimpanzees at the Arnhem Zoo and bonobos, posited that emotions are observable biological phenomena, whereas feelings are the subjective, internal experiences that accompany them [cite: 6, 7, 8]. 

Emotions can be quantified through facial expressions, vocalizations, physiological markers like blood pressure, and neural activity [cite: 6, 8]. Crucially, emotions differ from inflexible biological instincts. While an instinct triggers a predetermined behavioral sequence, an emotion prepares the body for action while requiring the organism to make a cognitive decision based on environmental context—such as deciding whether to fight, hide, or flee when experiencing fear [cite: 6]. De Waal’s observations of post-conflict consolation, empathy, and conflict resolution via sexual behavior in bonobo troops demonstrated that complex emotional regulation is not exclusively human [cite: 6, 7]. Because science cannot directly access the subjective "feelings" of any animal (human or non-human), researchers rely on the measurement of emotional states as proxies for conscious experience [cite: 6, 8].

### Neural Dynamics and Decentralized Subjectivity

The search for animal consciousness has frequently been hindered by a cortico-centric bias—the assumption that a vertebrate-like cerebral cortex is a prerequisite for subjective experience [cite: 9, 10]. This view is challenged by the "Neural Dynamics of Subjectivity" (NDS) approach advanced by philosophers and neuroscientists such as Peter Godfrey-Smith [cite: 11]. 

The NDS approach proposes that consciousness is a characteristic of nervous systems that have evolved to realize subjectivity through complex network interactions and large-scale dynamic neural patterns [cite: 11]. Deep phylogenetic divergences in the animal kingdom occurred millions of years before the evolution of complex cognition and sensing. Consequently, advanced cognitive capacities arose independently in radically different brain architectures—across vertebrates, arthropods, and cephalopods [cite: 11]. Research into ancient lineages, such as ctenophores and sponges, reveals early evolutionary stages of neural coordination [cite: 12]. This evolutionary perspective suggests that consciousness is not a biological binary but a continuum, with varying degrees and dimensions of sentience emerging in parallel across different phylogenetic branches through functional neural equivalents [cite: 9, 10, 11].

## Methodological Frameworks for Evaluating Sentience

To assess the likelihood of subjective experience in phylogenetically distant species, scientists have developed standardized evaluation models that synthesize neurological and behavioral data.

### The Eight-Criterion Evaluation Model

In 2021, a research team at the London School of Economics (LSE), led by Jonathan Birch, developed a rigorous eight-criterion framework to evaluate evidence of sentience in invertebrate taxa [cite: 13, 14, 15]. Commissioned by the United Kingdom government, this framework shifts focus away from specific mammalian brain structures, looking instead at the functional roles of integrative brain regions [cite: 16].

The eight criteria evaluate whether an animal demonstrates:
1. Possession of nociceptors capable of detecting noxious stimuli [cite: 13, 14].
2. Possession of integrative brain regions capable of bringing together information from diverse sensory sources [cite: 13, 14].
3. Neural connections linking nociceptors to these central integrative brain regions [cite: 13, 14].
4. Behavioral responses that are demonstrably altered by the administration of local anesthetics or analgesics [cite: 13, 14].
5. Motivational trade-offs, showing the capacity to balance a threat against the opportunity for a high-value reward [cite: 13, 14].
6. Flexible, self-protective behaviors in response to injury or threat, such as directed grooming or wound-tending [cite: 13, 14].
7. Associative learning that transcends simple habituation and sensitization [cite: 13, 14].
8. Behavior indicating that the animal values and seeks out local anesthetics or analgesics when injured [cite: 13, 14].

### Sentience Confidence Mapping in Invertebrates

The LSE team reviewed over 300 scientific studies to apply these criteria to cephalopod molluscs and decapod crustaceans, assigning confidence levels to each taxonomic group based on empirical evidence. Meeting three or more criteria establishes "substantial" evidence of sentience, while meeting five or more constitutes "strong" to "very strong" evidence [cite: 17].

| Taxonomic Group | Sentience Evidence Level | Criteria Satisfied (High/Very High Confidence) | Key Behavioral Evidence |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Octopods** | Very Strong | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8 | Targeted wound tending; active valuation of analgesics; flexible self-protection. |
| **True Crabs (Brachyura)** | Strong | 1, 2, 4, 6, 7 | Complex motivational trade-offs; flexible responses to localized injury. |
| **Squid & Cuttlefish** | Substantial | 1, 2, 3, 7 | Advanced associative learning; verified nociceptor connections. |
| **Lobsters & Anomuran Crabs** | Substantial | 1, 2, 4 (lobsters) / 1, 2, 6 (crabs) | Altered protective behaviors responsive to anesthetics. |

The resulting data underscores that decapod crustaceans and cephalopods possess the neural structures and behavioral repertoires necessary to regulate complex pain responses, heavily implying subjective suffering [cite: 18]. 

### Multi-Dimensional Consciousness Profiles

Building upon the identification of basic sentience, researchers have proposed multidimensional models to map the varied forms consciousness might take. The five-dimension framework identifies distinct axes of subjective experience: evaluative richness (the capacity to experience a range of valenced emotions), selfhood (distinguishing self from the environment), unity (integrating sensory inputs into a cohesive experience), perceptual richness, and temporality (experiencing a continuous stream of past and future events) [cite: 19, 20]. Applying this framework highlights that consciousness profiles vary dramatically even within specific classes, suggesting that umbrella terms like "cephalopod consciousness" obscure vast cognitive diversity [cite: 20]. 

### Play Behavior as an Indicator of Positive Affect

While pain and distress are primary metrics in animal welfare, the presence of positive affective states—such as joy or pleasure—is equally critical for establishing sentience. Play behavior is a primary indicator of positive affect, as it requires complex cognitive engagement without immediate survival utility [cite: 21, 22]. Ethologist Gordon Burghardt established five definitive criteria for identifying animal play:
1. The behavior is incompletely functional in its immediate context [cite: 21, 23].
2. It is voluntary, spontaneous, autotelic (done for its own sake), and intentional [cite: 21, 23].
3. It resembles functional behaviors but is structurally or temporally exaggerated, awkward, or modified [cite: 21, 23].
4. It is repeated consistently but is not pathological or stereotyped [cite: 21, 23].
5. It is initiated exclusively when the animal is healthy and free from acute stress, hunger, or competition [cite: 21, 23].

Applying these criteria has revealed play in diverse non-mammalian taxa. Researchers observing white-spotted African cichlids (*Tropheus duboisi*) documented the fish repeatedly striking bottom-weighted thermometers, an autotelic behavior driven by the stimulus's righting response [cite: 24, 25]. In a massive peer-reviewed study analyzing 66 species of aquarium fish, over 80% exhibited an inquisitive, playful response to moving laser pointer dots, with nearly half demonstrating a distinct preference for red lasers [cite: 23, 25]. Elephant fish (*Mormyrus*), rough silversides (*Membras vagrans*), and sterlets (*Acipenser ruthenus*) have similarly been documented engaging in object-oriented play [cite: 25]. Additionally, the California two-spot octopus (*Octopus bimaculoides*) exhibits documented play behaviors that satisfy Burghardt's criteria, providing insight into how internal motivation and playful behavior act as mechanisms for stress reduction and cognitive flexibility in cephalopods [cite: 21, 22, 26].

## Empirical Evidence of Sentience Across Taxa

Advanced behavioral paradigms and neurological mapping have generated compelling evidence of consciousness in taxa possessing nervous systems vastly different from the mammalian model.

### Cephalopod Molluscs: Decentralized Intelligence

Cephalopods possess highly decentralized nervous systems, where arms are capable of making semi-autonomous decisions regarding grasping and foraging even if severed from the central brain [cite: 22]. Despite this unique architecture, octopuses satisfy seven of the eight LSE sentience criteria [cite: 16]. When exposed to noxious stimuli, octopuses exhibit targeted wound-tending, grooming of the injured site, and a capacity to learn to avoid contexts associated with pain while actively seeking environments where analgesics are administered [cite: 12, 27]. 

Other coleoid cephalopods exhibit similarly advanced cognition. Cuttlefish demonstrate episodic-like memory, remembering details of specific past events, and exhibit future-oriented foraging cognition [cite: 20, 28]. Research also indicates that stress induces pessimistic judgment biases in cuttlefish, a strong indicator of emotional state and affective pain experience [cite: 27]. 

Evidence regarding self-awareness, however, remains mixed. The mirror self-recognition (MSR) test, a standard metric for self-awareness in vertebrates, has yielded inconclusive results in cephalopods. While some species (*Octopus laqueus*, *Hapalochlaena lunulata*) ignore mirrors entirely, others (the common octopus *Octopus vulgaris* and common cuttlefish *Sepia officinalis*) display intense interest but respond with agonistic behaviors, treating their reflection as a conspecific rival [cite: 27, 29]. Nevertheless, their ability to fluidly change posture and skin texture for camouflage implies a complex, integrated awareness of their physical body in relation to their environment [cite: 29].

### Decapod Crustaceans: Pain and Motivational Trade-Offs

Research into decapod crustaceans—such as true crabs, hermit crabs, lobsters, and shrimp—has heavily focused on pain responses and nociception. Decapods possess nociceptors and the integrative brain structures required to process noxious stimuli [cite: 18]. Experiments applying acetic acid or caustic soda to the antennae or eyestalks of shore crabs (*Carcinus maenas*) and glass prawns (*Palaemon elegans*) induce intense, localized grooming of the affected area [cite: 30]. Crucially, when these animals are pre-treated with topical anesthetics like benzocaine, these directed grooming behaviors are significantly reduced, strongly implying that the behavior is a response to the subjective experience of pain rather than a mechanical reflex [cite: 30].

Further evidence emerges from the observation of motivational trade-offs. In laboratory settings, hermit crabs will abandon a low-quality shell when exposed to electric shocks but are significantly more likely to endure the shock if housed in a high-quality, preferred shell [cite: 13, 18]. This behavioral plasticity demonstrates that decapods integrate nociceptive input with external resource evaluation, weighing the subjective cost of pain against the biological value of a resource—a hallmark of conscious decision-making [cite: 13, 14]. 

### Arachnid Cognition: Individual Recognition and Forward Planning

Traditionally, miniature arthropod brains were assumed to lack the computational power for complex cognitive processing [cite: 31]. However, neuroethological studies on jumping spiders challenge this assumption. Harvard researchers utilizing specialized spherical treadmills and point-light displays found that the jumping spider *Menemerus semilimbatus* can distinguish between biological motion and random motion—an ability previously thought to be exclusive to humans and advanced vertebrates [cite: 32]. The spiders oriented explicitly toward displays that simulated the natural walking motion of other animals [cite: 32].

Moreover, studies on the regal jumping spider (*Phidippus regius*) provide the first evidence of individual recognition and long-term memory in a non-social arthropod [cite: 33, 34]. Using a habituation-dishabituation paradigm, researchers confronted subjects with live conspecifics separated by transparent barriers. Over repeated exposures, the spiders habituated, maintaining a greater distance from familiar individuals [cite: 31, 35]. However, when an entirely novel individual was introduced hours later, the spiders exhibited an unprecedented rebound in interest and close approach behavior [cite: 31, 33, 35]. This rebound rules out general physical fatigue, demonstrating that the spider encodes and stores individual-specific visual representations to guide future social interactions [cite: 31, 34, 35]. Additionally, obstacle course experiments with 15 species of jumping spiders, including *Portia fimbriata*, reveal genuine forward-planning capacities; they maintain a mental representation of out-of-sight prey and successfully navigate complex, winding detours to reach it, pausing in confusion if a path is incorrect [cite: 36].

### Insect Neurobiology: Complex Decision-Making in Miniature Brains

Insect cognition exhibits profound complexity, characterized by modular brain systems and sensitivity to psychological stressors. 

#### Honeybee Cognitive Consistency and Stress
Honeybees (*Apis mellifera*) possess a brain smaller than a sesame seed, yet execute highly accurate autonomous decision-making [cite: 37]. Empirical studies demonstrate that honeybees exhibit "cognitive consistency"—individuals that excel in simple discrimination tasks also consistently succeed in highly complex challenges like reversal learning and negative patterning [cite: 38]. This indicates that bees possess deeper learning capacities and modular brain systems, relying on working memory and attention rather than mere task-specific reflexes [cite: 38]. 

Furthermore, honeybee cognition is deeply impacted by environmental stress. Researchers from the Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden exposed honeybees to continuous artificial light, discovering that light pollution disrupts their circadian rhythms and induces chronic physiological stress [cite: 39]. This stress is mediated by persistent surges of brain norepinephrine (NE) [cite: 39]. The NE surge caused marked deficits in the bees' olfactory learning, memory, and waggle dance communication, mirroring the detrimental impacts of chronic stress and sleep deprivation observed in mammalian brains [cite: 39]. 

#### Fruit Fly Connectomes and Circadian Autonomy
In late 2024, the FlyWire consortium achieved a monumental milestone by mapping the complete connectome of the adult female fruit fly (*Drosophila melanogaster*), detailing 139,255 neurons and over 50 million synaptic connections [cite: 40]. This map has revolutionized the understanding of insect behavioral regulation. Researchers identified a network of approximately 240 neurons governing the fly's circadian clock [cite: 41]. 

Behavioral experiments leveraging this mapping demonstrate that fruit flies actively prefer to live under temporal organization. When exposed to constant light that breaks down their internal clock, flies will actively migrate between dark and illuminated areas to self-inflict rhythmic behavioral patterns [cite: 42]. This active environmental manipulation preserves their circadian rhythms and ensures less-fragmented, high-quality sleep [cite: 42]. Furthermore, genetic studies silencing the *mask* and *clu* genes in fruit flies revealed highly conserved dopaminergic pathways; reducing dopamine synthesis in the fly brain blunts their anticipation of light and alters sleep architectures in ways homologous to human neurological disorders [cite: 43, 44].

## The New York Declaration on Animal Consciousness

The accelerating pace of discoveries regarding non-human cognition culminated in the drafting of the New York Declaration on Animal Consciousness in April 2024 [cite: 28, 45]. Initiated by researchers including Jonathan Birch (London School of Economics), Kristin Andrews (York University), and Jeff Sebo (New York University), the declaration was signed by dozens of eminent scientists, philosophers, and legal scholars [cite: 45, 46]. 

The declaration establishes a new scientific consensus regarding the distribution of sentience across the animal kingdom. It articulates three core points:
1. There is strong scientific support for attributions of conscious experience to mammals and birds [cite: 28, 46].
2. The empirical evidence indicates a "realistic possibility" of conscious experience in all vertebrates (including reptiles, amphibians, and fishes) and many invertebrates (specifically identifying cephalopod mollusks, decapod crustaceans, and insects) [cite: 28, 46, 47].
3. When a realistic possibility of conscious experience exists, it is scientifically and ethically irresponsible to ignore that possibility in policy and decision-making contexts; welfare risks must be considered and mitigated [cite: 28, 46].

The declaration fundamentally alters the burden of proof. It argues that absolute certainty regarding the exact nature of subjective experience is not required to afford animals moral consideration and welfare protections [cite: 28, 47]. The presence of complex behaviors—such as episodic memory, spatial planning, motivational trade-offs, and play—provides sufficient empirical grounding to apply the precautionary principle across a vast array of taxa [cite: 28, 48].

## Global Legislative Integration of Sentience Principles

Catalyzed by the evolving scientific consensus and shifting public perception, legal frameworks worldwide are moving away from classifying animals strictly as property, increasingly enshrining sentience into binding legislation.

### Legislative Advances in Europe and the United Kingdom

The United Kingdom has served as a primary legislative testing ground for sentience policies. Informed directly by the LSE's eight-criterion review, the UK passed the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022, legally recognizing cephalopod molluscs and decapod crustaceans as sentient beings alongside vertebrates [cite: 18, 49, 50, 51]. This recognition mandated the creation of the Animal Sentience Committee (ASC) to ensure animal welfare is considered in government policy [cite: 51]. In 2025 and 2026, the ASC and advocacy groups like Crustacean Compassion aggressively pushed to harmonize pre-existing laws, demanding the inclusion of decapods in the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act to shield them from unregulated laboratory experimentation [cite: 52, 53]. These efforts culminated in the UK Government's Animal Welfare Strategy for England, which officially condemned the live boiling of crustaceans and mandated humane stunning protocols [cite: 53, 54].

Simultaneously, the European Union concluded a massive revision of its livestock farming regulations in late 2025 [cite: 55]. Driven by the "End the Cage Age" citizen initiative and scientific reports from the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) confirming the sentience of fish and complex invertebrates, the EU is shifting its legislative focus [cite: 55]. New standards require agricultural environments to support the natural behaviors of species, moving beyond merely minimizing physical distress [cite: 55]. Member states are following suit; the Romanian parliament recently initiated debates to amend Law no. 205/2004, aiming to explicitly define animals as "sentient beings with rights and freedoms" to establish a modern framework for prosecuting cruelty [cite: 56].

### Evolving Legal Frameworks in the Americas

In North America, animal welfare legislation remains highly jurisdiction-dependent. In Canada, animals are historically treated as property under federal and provincial laws [cite: 57, 58]. However, the 2019 passage of Bill C-84 modernized the Criminal Code, expanding definitions of animal fighting and bestiality, and mandating that offenders be added to the National Sex Offender Registry due to the statistical link between animal abuse and human violence [cite: 57, 58, 59, 60]. Provincially, Quebec stands alone in Canada, having passed the Animal Welfare and Safety Act and amending its Civil Code to formally recognize animals as sentient beings [cite: 58, 61].

In Latin America, significant constitutional and judicial milestones occurred between 2024 and 2025. In Mexico, sweeping constitutional reforms (Articles 3, 4, and 73) explicitly prohibited animal mistreatment, mandated the inclusion of animal welfare in educational curricula, and granted the federal government the power to enact overarching animal protection laws [cite: 62]. In Brazil, while there is no singular federal statute defining sentience, Chapter VI, Article 225 of the 1988 Constitution mandates governmental protection of fauna from cruelty, providing a basis for welfare regulation [cite: 63, 64]. Furthermore, Brazilian courts have established powerful legal precedents recognizing cats and dogs as sentient subjects of law, while legislative efforts like Senate Bill 351/2015 seek to amend the Civil Code so animals are no longer legally classified as movable assets [cite: 63, 65].

### Landmark Animal Welfare Proclamations in Africa

Historically, comprehensive animal welfare legislation in Africa has been limited, but profound shifts are currently underway. In a historic legislative session in 2025, the Ethiopian Parliament unanimously approved the Animal Health and Welfare Proclamation (No. 1376/2025) [cite: 66]. This act represents the most comprehensive welfare legislation in the nation's history and formally recognizes animals as sentient beings for the first time [cite: 66]. This recognition is highly consequential for Ethiopia, which is home to an estimated 10.6 million donkeys—the largest population globally [cite: 66]. The proclamation establishes foundational protections for working animals whose health and welfare are inextricably linked to the economic stability and daily survival of millions of Ethiopian households [cite: 66].

In South Africa, while the concept of sentience is not explicitly codified in the text of the primary legislation, the Animal Protection Act No. 71 of 1962 robustly prohibits animal cruelty, implicitly acknowledging that animals experience physical and psychological suffering [cite: 67]. Furthermore, constitutional jurisprudence has fortified these protections; a landmark 2016 decision by the Constitutional Court of South Africa affirmed the statutory power of the National SPCA to conduct private prosecutions of animal cruelty, establishing an aggressive enforcement mechanism to protect animal welfare across the nation [cite: 62].

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36. [iflscience.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHCfMk9pbQxxhv7ZDx0pdFNsS2JOFmOaHlCKDcPsTPSmAbKOip-GbFeeefGzucWQCne7YmAEh0_RV3rRoo0SffuTUWh40ah1R5v2Kepz1LBmZ5RJt81SHKWrY3HtvjtyUYClgMnbQx8Q30PNsitc2TD9QoO14h81Qf0582_wv2n7jJraqdjONusd-6OeitzVf3iDOejfY1UjfvUiw==)
37. [sci.news](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEfWaM6e2hv2wbzOZIUg0sc61WWiGm7L-byMN5pGdiaOBqshMn1UQ37e-aWdhODf4bAxrZUmuMLL3R6Y4c5n6FGYh1bBPryFlrZp7cjmIHhy3DdAW98CsEjrjCp-E_yHAazYyBA4O5uDId0QEdPa6S9PpjgP7CA)
38. [iaabcfoundation.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFGw2a5B6qLH7pdLhAsaYivVuaz0DaXXxwySfm6ouYWi1NR5ZrEMfS2Fn-RNumQL9xZfcl4GxUmM7ly-47ogRaqzgjkvRdjFufnqfKE4L7gVeqDgmk5l_joaXhhN9cbAsE=)
39. [cas.cn](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHHDWrozDy7ITWhnV3OzxSrH01cp66pkCWJMDmCCG0nKaOcjIagXJJhwjXlnvQyGXT80usAmqnppkf_uCEGNpK38-RgVKjkjnHrJqVlzIQ7o6Y6A_A8gkivESlvX6fvy0yTS8bx9zr_NGc6e2zI-uGRo94d6gWw5STCKYstzz_bi3ZjYPxHUwk=)
40. [brainfacts.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFvGQnmxJveomxnKIfDa1xPqnl93gLMjnJLivYL-aaTyJW_2EN8lU45P5eiMzkRGonZ7mWRxDzZRM1JG6t5fK46MHHOsEUnI1CWLZNDw_wjHQ84UAZ34loBsiy0FBXwN_uA5pvVbFVvWkTWaKeSDIj3ZsX5KEyi-duzJNk1TTZ5K76ELyiBKDWiIZPf5zYqmQRV-6VyQ5ksTFrO2XcYrmXk4Aex0miDNpw6Cf_Z_220Ejk2_43TIc2BQdxXWq26iLkUhhc=)
41. [unr.edu](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEl40CNtDroQeXF7IecErLFrUoCC2JRN3fwlHUWH8KskWtcy8b3a51FGwh9RlNgeYS7BIdxaKMUBRNKA38ph9aVbZ8GmC9S9ITrAj-N7czYq-nWuCfWHaIQUueU45uybohwUqTKesMRoy9bqTxv4iA1aEj43GiYaoE=)
42. [biorxiv.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFvyHm2TjzR-aF6TBgqrP421MVe3WluaK_Dsf-KZYRBcjpNZeZs9_s1CtyBXGIWGQ678h2OMt-M0gCHyVNjSGiUP8iAl9qu8uFn_S0bhSnOIhKSSGpoUDl5x3F16dnGDfD0cg5A8xVFSlQUkJjslHgFGw==)
43. [utah.edu](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQErtdHLP_EtL3E7uuYOebU7wZzy1PoSMi6YKT0iu2LH02HJwjYLmm8WFb9Jp5yHD4A2IfmbPgwSrZrtkbhJ-u6Zy71YGa4wxYo5PnIr5moOvbEUvB5tlALDXzYA6sRzpqVUFoAbW2NFZWBFN6m59LVsqx5RGi-7K9Gtec-QsIVdiQwfAIU8xS5ShEKk0letV1wbteBoIIHUfHln3blBXTXfFdKEIZQrAstcaDBr1rM=)
44. [news-medical.net](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHndBa4FOP7Z_m-jfIe_5BVPfJKQrk27UQSMNoy-CxS3aampwrrbqftuSIgTSsjXSRf84EoIMsCe8ZZf0voq1OAcZYBiaRkSGHt_uJzFPLrKsMKjhd20z6C6K0TOF8wr2bnlEuS0fN6Jj0BmvHPzDKPaw2DH94tp0FqzEqJIyBckH9RnnC4G4METoiShSMPfSoUMFUJbJTZqc0xibQANjl7Oj68ng==)
45. [kimmela.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFlpIrKVFSoWRZFiQFAIKS-SyHb-dN4STH2vWw_aL42M01zG6lgy1ZPf2BJQyLW97IqbLjCBpjpF4uQmJUPB4p_oQuEBnxxNWYgVhS0GrqWPKssODR570yxK44866keaJI0OqUU_eGMkgKbZdt5XQCApK8Tv3WFB0r1J7gYE1Q8EqoowQ==)
46. [google.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFaTJ-G5c1JS_Wt01s0jZ8H6vonGIJVQP7ACNbbgc9yw7WV-sYvEo2jsr3kPANVCDeuR8xW2A_H-Njl87Ql8tORrs8JgvTBYNEygwJ68R4dTuDI-JXxGNCOriP2gXFj5MyjffoMc3Nxx_T2Rri31iDx)
47. [google.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEVVgurOa30nE7K93cI4UzHJmIcJVn9_BO7JRt_lwW3zHw0GMXgR4q2KDFRF9US3QCTdWKYl1uW-Bpa-nDpFeV4g87xs9kMN3oBtV7GMfiSHrP0QQR1rQ88ENaYpuQbm84vLv0v4_WsIoqGryoP6Lc=)
48. [chipchick.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEfZ4PomoPy-h1_0fPF_vcepqyOhqnIIYwAQbE-8yxzJhkdwEtArnLbeS0PInzbYiJhQKO1EAqf_KmxOYmA7-rLvJbojLIe42p0YVUmVWf68pUMNLSxH7d51LD9ocK15y3l_Gvge_1W5XJtNAOlOA_Wz6aGVan1LN0CCpOZ5e0ne77dznunfGLWHyWu7km3qaYfjqeNCr8KoA0-a-MQbcAleQ5bB7wmVvFZmT18Q7h-0sqiPI9AiZ2I2Kr8XECyNzV3bjiG3gi9P0HG-9-A2Npqx7ZV0W72GAF4RCLJWStbvZm_v3XbIgmIzTS8qvCh5u8gsh0udbDwgd8PZQIAIQIfIs1Er0vn6n55fm1k0MI=)
49. [crustaceancompassion.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHQUn5vW8SIszAImFgOQEdykc0-Wu7d4O-n6nMta6X05FKNDijr4OVjYvAZuQ35Z3ziBEiup2dxjnMOMVLoXPAycHyq728hEz_1WzbXm1DcHrRdRkd7b8DeDMvuYJoUVCsDHUiLO_ylW-zkCjRtaKlSf1QtCQ==)
50. [lse.ac.uk](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFhsfQXTpFz7vnZQMaX0ZTIxb7Pc7dgCeHoVcACF2_RP5XC8whDrGD4HN0F_CJrsLDLYamsBPb24Q98uu_06_4nCk6fs0oIGJkrlX12JUjnJziO289Tod3MrAq92rUvOJ4UhEwLQtIbSUadJsNDTBQbZSBVHuP52tXjIs6NQVc_b3JUYQbJLY7wQtODFe5LTQVTZfjQkNxkrCAg9sBZQWsIEcSc_4l2i41FP1c1zknZpEGwGaC7qsbgACnAQQ==)
51. [www.gov.uk](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQER6ovK45OaMoxjr3Gmg8MaIKHUznaPGm8RJUXFGvCv43iWTYmZpPN-Fi9iE4AED19TKktOFeTe19th7QF8KhxlcR9PWwsp7I3j117Q3Ng6GV5LisOM-SJUEPCMnP9oMMW2aYDbIzClivQqsO2dlNckqmCABlgXVfGye-SpTNDF3p8lFmZ4gqaX5-jWN_XIrl5OFclqysuSxIqSLdDXgxuFa47KdqAgEzw5oahwsvJasrHSu7lcukgN8rPJ24Mk3qepkQN-03tPRDUc3lu6rs_XycPa-snD90xYbGoMlQyfRw9ERXnwMmnzwey6DElKQZoXft4Yxd6p9IUWQHZn4jKUubaSLaWPvhjqE_im)
52. [naturewatch.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH5ZxyEEy7wOJWukdScc7h__E912FBEkQ41bidnzjIxJpdVzsuK8dfR2A_1A1yNEhY7JbRoIri9x9niaAO9tMua2jfhhl1lSVJymgIttMo8TeWRNa7myd494gOeFsq4RnlYHRaa-uvdufZjJ31RQ7jh9oE1cA9kbozv7LEOkQ==)
53. [crustaceancompassion.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE2wXPfMm7lLOc_V9hrEomf1mqO5CrsLMTYEeV7RoQGji9T7Q-c0aV6DV5mv7iSlySUByER03lcu4Mz887EzC-lQSfdKBAoixhtI3my55VeSqwwvF__WdBUnYjCn2gTX1dKUbcY6J6G-Hl8Fr1LtwQxhPoRpR0Bh9TxX2Am1gm-gIMsWWbim3B0BKxt9JGSBEpFZtN3G_wV2rkXr0oZeOnMImkG0Q5jbuIoSBmYesLzFFW5c0sXBFB8W8u6SNPdNl026_onRoS5gVM=)
54. [www.gov.uk](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHxl2ed9T3aUwkBDUp81yDQgst8q9DDkZN9ftqCNIhoAhkHPxVfn1g0fqTHL6yTN9CCxOh_3aVl8YXGzNb0tusROrKNzV8gW22yAgdULrWkBe_jCDR0yAJ2bowdqlVy_z6baIOBd4SxSTup2Snq_BgrXEPRJy6NNC_xP97bIPVCjysnA4RG8hBTnqctidboUrD_Io08ydwhs_4OK-v8xUigtaDGHDUi6a8EFC82060gPYi6OEvm7wPoVPin9IxhUdZPnURGHtwUU678COUxrb8DKmKSPxcRhMpi3t8RCnJifa8C70I2ObJ_DnM6bM071cKjjFnrvJtHE2a2mCAxCYuq)
55. [animanaturalis.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFW6zt0LI3pVJ3EjHN9C6vkxW7PyyxhxHnV_KkyGPIcjhT5G7SfDxyC1XfPiKHB1mbPZK3zcP2IK1Y_lY6NIxL9Cx8U6zUZgbsejkg_kf_AJHZLLIOGEdk1IEZM3QMAgDSzJsUuNSFGMW-U_OPKo9c0u6SM7VhRKf5gKEH3lOO3uC6cowkDUbK8eonId_72ab3Vnth1Vrpxejx5HzC8OyuHOq8ZkB__ZmvjM1E=)
56. [humaneworld.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE0v5wNQDuW5xr-v_R4Ib3F7bcONIO-tlKH8HxKZwrxW3acFb7xRElENxK3C7_Nd1a8OyvXskaCpROhQeXJxtjHTCuwwJpmvSMoZcyy036maO1NTffpFaGB2qAWwqI30l0w8k5VO9H4nJRwbruNBtP3kmDhXusBc6L0IqLZy7OdO7HtNCh2M-REIqkO9hemG9w=)
57. [amazonaws.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH97bnWgvf6OaU_Wqy8Zcn6pnyJwDmVXyAJfMK9wtuPMY_U-WAhGCm0lsJBciWJMRGmx9CWqk1yRTmHIzDZfTQw2K7LgYwWLuvYuMCLaYSdlHZBiKDTg8DSkbZuASvViy2cYLeE8nBYNE0LqpAGKY0BFH2MXtnqI-mTxJGiSH0yQYkjl_Ote9W1MW_Kh7nhMVVzehr_CqT_aaPaEgEz8K1y_Ui4vL2poCFxhWEoH9X10D8p)
58. [worldanimalprotection.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEzDjPkGSJebrxj6E4jz3tt5JEN2DDpZ6DFXoH3AVmMP-WzPhfPZFFkEokhSUQc0MGhAVchpj5MF0gONd_Q2s5L86bB8sudK7Cv9rLCHD6aOMrLrsRQGumsFgJ_G7Ob-OJO-PZt_kkXQnLr)
59. [cbc.ca](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHXMd9XjbGSYyM1zjTtB0guFz6oIsl750jcZbPjRXOVIg3_CrvVxQALed0EofgQla5d5h6-sbaqytjYOnxZdGDbS_rWpiOBgZWL7GCTUh7_KWn2F1KWIb13YqDcfXk2pLI74oS6lux8OhO6wqWm8Ohsrd78025evDSD_gsdquHZDUKju2CZdQ==)
60. [canada.ca](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF7Y-20PpzbOkvW_s-amUCRw71eq6vt45_PM3Z9y8rwctbDRVs4q8V6wjW8jiA0e82h4svqPKmmlqZV5kf80FL0vsxvLwShuqi7cRnhIvICd6Hwy1RaLiwLvS9JJHyr40dJ0vrWdvMVh02y_p__UyeP4qrRz1gdAWsMhOMHzkBgvnxD5rJD-PM9ltYWgZKSFlokYAOLQnAjlFV4oawiANylbsUzbIxcnxUvpviI1bRd_hb3De6Y38IbBOVxT1-ARRUwfXlN8rfwtE1Sppl5ztT8cQQYYKoXKcNTVwqY_DyjjnNapnDj8cyAb9lpW17igbGQ5w==)
61. [spca.bc.ca](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEqyfERAD6kMPkKiKgLXTYM-g3OQA9bTAuqsc8sufXzFGgab2PtYzDFbtDGiEJs6FbV2x6dWCyGfU44-iW98YxNajMW2K10PlZMklFY1yRgFUh4eM8z0pYkla2rwzvjzfItKkoH5UWHSPK9SrfLem-kTfhipuq4meuLh8bvEGy7x0mjPM8=)
62. [wellbeingintl.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFgapsKsebSGCtdJ2xVENTKVDjNWkxRokLGr4MmomTvbU2unKTDBWfxF0Xb83Xi1Gy7kk1iMxzjJpVkXmMF2I_kYBrN8e9ef8F830MnmJxPRVv77e6iLdlxKMCTfMLK7xNyWhnocrdo267d8D4MxXVE8yK7rxcWPUrhi15m7TQu-G-Kkusp)
63. [worldanimalprotection.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFaU2WBJK4BAXI1QQcWzcRQUe1YraEAOVldxHDBuAQyngEm170u9kegGbxCQ--BgD7kCccmmyC-9LcpvycNu0XDWQQ-AYjZPYVXw4V3iGSEKBr8IwweOcBlkPYz_tqboq2HImhvMS4H6na2)
64. [journalair.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHYecTUTVDPf_OLj8Ht9O56TGjoC3osS-DFkeJJ2C7ebqmpXM4YyiyECeMbvjqa33M9J7QFrBXDycqSJ14O7chm2YDzqVEZNYc02So6VPIFJEgpeagb0ehlx2GOs3nj15hGXeZgLgblq4ibh_U=)
65. [reddit.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGIzcIlv_m-t6SLQ_yjoV5t66b0JjaJZtXICfgToRkJIrU8jaEUnWS4u_E6R-sbKRakzz58G2tshCuXUdM4_7mFVcV4p8lHMZr8CXtbyAKefFQxEwezWRhgRHL2fzXfxTyxGx1gRQwK2u_AIU7lejXok6Ltne4WHVUnUh_F1bk3wv--ZI6QiMERU6-lZvs-Odxs2W_JmlOTv44q)
66. [thedonkeysanctuary.org.uk](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFiUdmFKf2syFjCkNehbhFJLAynPiEU_iyPXncI30ITLY60mKywPNEX4woFI_nDHTrhIaeVUQ-Jna59_pSeLMLZLhjQgmpcHt3v_z8LhHvgjG1ITjDnwvW6GJVyp4AteZWkLqC7rPTAqMNy00kIVNt3wkjHuFXKgJnpCGyqaxrqBygKg4qqeTW_WCLAsDuZDCupX-YdtQ==)
67. [worldanimalprotection.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHLcm9ZVY6XZeimkGoO2-mSm8e4ft29y7BeeYZkQBWOD7a-JiOGWszGO5PgkQhp7Ov_Vn3LcEgrz9Kv8QET5KnfCQzn_qDp8agHgHCiIALH6BWzKa5eQlOSYfSCvCDoVzB-ByDt5OMoTUBXOBguBDi_)
